Monday, June 20, 2011

Meet John Bolton

John R. Bolton

Our regular readers know that Two Sisters From The Right love to express our opinion on a variety of subjects, however each time we find an essay which echoes our thoughts and is written in a style which provides the information we would wish to relay, we feature it for our readers, always giving the author and publication due credit of course.That is the case with this article entitled, "Bolton 2012?" It was written by Robert Costa and appeared in theJune 20, 2011 edition of The National Review Online.

John Robert Bolton, the 25th United States Ambassador to the United Nations was born in Baltimore, Maryland on November 20, 1948. He was the son of a fireman and grew up in a working class neighborhood in Baltimore. The 62 year old Bolton is married and he and his wife have one daughter.

If Bolton were to run for the presidency of the United States, he would be a formidable candidate. A pro-life conservative, John Bolton is a career diplomat and a nonpolitical figure. He is however articulate, bold, and extremely knowledgeable. He also possesses an essentially required quality -- He is an honest man.

The following article will enable the readers who are not familiar with Ambassador Bolton, to get to know the man who just might decide to join the 2012 presidential race.Two Sisters

If John Bolton runs for president — and he very well might — he will run to win.

“I would not run as a one-issue candidate,” Bolton says as we chat in his corner office, high above downtown Washington at the American Enterprise Institute. “Anybody who does that is declaring himself to be marginal.”Bolton, a former ambassador to the United Nations, is no sideshow. His walls are dotted with presidential appointments: He served Ronald Reagan as an assistant attorney general. George H. W. Bush tapped him for a top post at the State Department. For Bush the younger, he returned to Foggy Bottom, overseeing arms control.But it was in New York City, at that glassy rectangle towering over the East River, where Bolton left a bruising, indelible mark. As George W. Bush’s U.N. ambassador, he gleefully tangled with fussy Europeans, Third World despots, and international bureaucrats. That experience, he reckons, is more than enough to make GOP primary voters, at the very least, curious. It is also why, even in mid-June, Bolton continues to make calls to close friends, pollsters, and political consultants, mulling his options. “Clearly the field is not fixed,” he says. “I do not sense any coalescing around a particular candidate. The ups and downs in the polls are an indication of how volatile things are, and how people want to find the right person to beat Obama.”

Could that person be a 62-year-old ex-diplomat with a snowdrift mustache? Bolton thinks it’s possible. As he sees it, 2012 will be an unusual year, the first in his lifetime where someone with his résumé could leap into contention. “Nobody is settling,” he says. “The momentum keeps shifting on the right. That’s why other people are thinking about getting in — and why even a relatively late start, in historical terms, by a nonpolitical figure, is not disqualifying.”

Watching the recent CNN debate, Bolton was unimpressed. “Bumper-sticker responses to bumper-sticker-length questions,”he says. “Are we going to have a debate about the Republican debate, or is the media going to have that debate? It’s that sort of thing that actually impels me to get in, just to stand up. I hope I would have had the courage in that debate, if I was asked the deep-dish-pizza question, to say that this is silly.”

Bolton pauses then rubs his chin. It all sounds good — almost too easy: fiery conservative enters the race, shakes up the field, and things snowball. In many respects, Bolton would love to join the presidential fray tomorrow, if it meant simply showing up. But he wonders whether he is ready to build a national political machine. “I am tanned, rested, and ready to govern,” he smiles. Mounting a slick, savvy campaign, well, that could be difficult.

His reluctance is more practical than personal. Bolton, more than he lets on, is a political junkie. In 1964, growing up in working-class Baltimore, he skipped school to campaign for Barry Goldwater. In almost every sense, the nitty-gritty of campaign life appeals to him. Rather, it is that looming climb up the fundraising mountain, where so many have been lost, that makes him cautious. “The overall effort requires very pronounced skills, and I have to decide whether I am prepared to go through with that,” he says. “But the other things, the handshaking at the plant gate at eight in the morning? I would enjoy that.”

He will decide by Labor Day, a self-imposed deadline. Until then, Bolton is drafting a multifaceted strategy, one that would enable him to enter late. He recognizes that his tenure at the U.N., or perhaps his appearances on Fox News, may be how many know him. If he runs, he would need to show voters that he is more than that smart guy on cable television, more than an elder statesman.

To the viability question, Bolton says, game on. “I would focus first on New Hampshire, followed by South Carolina, Florida, and Nevada,” he says. “I think that is a very understandable path to the nomination.” Iowa, however, is probably out of the equation. He is against ethanol subsidies, for one, and it may be a bit too late to build a base there, “where the 99 counties are like the 99 names of God.”

Still, even as the clock ticks, Bolton firmly believes that competency and leadership will be a major factor in the primary. And it is on this front, he says, where he could swoop in, make his case, and surprise.“I have more experience in the executive branch of the federal government — which is what the presidential candidates are running to head — than anybody in the field, or those likely to get into the field,” he asserts. “There are members of Congress, but they have never been in the executive branch. And there is a huge difference — a huge difference — between being a member of Congress and being president.” President Obama, he insists, is “proof positive.”

Come October 2012, when the GOP nominee faces Obama in a national debate, Republicans will need an experienced voice at the podium, he says, one ready to blast the president’s aimless leadership, not merely rebut the president’s talking points. “Obama will be able to play being commander-in-chief; it will all be blue smoke and mirrors,” he explains. “If the Republican nominee is not prepared to hold his or her own in that debate, it will not be because they can’t answer the test question of who is prime minister of Equatorial Guinea — it will be because they do not project the requisite leadership qualities, the ability to sit behind the big desk.”

What about Jon Huntsman? The former Utah governor recently served as ambassador to China. If Bolton is not on that stage, maybe he could be an effective foreign-policy foil. Bolton scowls at the thought. “I continue to believe in the Eleventh Commandment,” he says, referring to Ronald Reagan’s maxim not to criticize fellow Republicans. “But I will say this, unequivocally: I would not work in Barack Obama’s administration.”Bolton wonders why Huntsman, if he is a conservative, decided to accept the president’s appointment. “There is no patriotic obligation to help advance the career of a politician who is otherwise pursuing interests that are fundamentally antithetical to your values. That’s not the call of patriotism,” he says. “I don’t understand it. This is not like World War II, when we are facing an existential threat to the country as a whole, and you do put partisanship aside.”

Turning to domestic issues, Bolton tells me that he is pro-life. “I think that Ronald Reagan had it right, being against abortion except in certain limited, defined circumstances,” he says. On fiscal issues, he is an avowed hawk who fully supports Rep. Paul Ryan’s budget “It is important that we are prepared to defend it, even if that is not ultimately the adopted plan,” he says. “It does not change for anyone 55 and older, but I honestly wish it did, that we could go further than that.”

Foreign policy, though, remains Bolton’s bailiwick. He remains a strong supporter of the military effort in Afghanistan. He is also frustrated with recent GOP primary chatter. “We should not be seduced by momentary swings in public opinion,” he warns. “It has been a rock of conservative policy that we protect the national interest, whether it’s popular or unpopular. If we deviate from that, just because it’s politically opportune to do so, we are really making a mistake.”

“What I am in favor of is destroying the Taliban and al-Qaeda’s capability to wage war,” Bolton says. “Doing that does not require creating a Jeffersonian, democratic regime in Kabul and eliminating corruption countrywide, because we are not going to do either of those two things. It means defeating the enemy.”

Of course, “people don’t like to talk about victory and defeat anymore,” he notes. “But if you can’t talk about that, then you can’t define why we are there. That’s not to say that it’s going to happen tomorrow; it’s going to take a long time. But that has to remain the objective. And that, I think, is the strategic posture around which Republicans can and should unite.”

GOP contenders, he hopes, will rally behind that mission. If not, we may yet see him in Manchester.